Phase i and Phase ii Environmental Site Assessment

TKEC conducts Phase I and Phase II Environmental Site Assessments to identify actual or potential environmental contamination to your site. This information is used to fulfill environmental site assessment due diligence requirements and to establish protection from potential liability under the Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation and Liability Act (CERCLA).

Phase I Environmental Site Assessments (ESAs)

Phase II Environmental Site Investigations/Characterizations

Phase III Site Clean Up

At TKEC, our Phase I and Phase II Environmental Site Assessments are conducted in conformance with the EPA’s Standards and Practices for All Appropriate Inquiries (AAI) [40 CFR Part 312], and the American Society for Testing and Materials’ (ASTM) E1527-13 “Standard Practice for Environmental Site Assessments: Phase I Environmental Site Assessment Process” or they can be customized to meet specific customer requirements. All of our ESAs (Phase I, II and III) are conducted entirely by (not just under the direction of) staff members who meet the definition of “Environmental Professional” as defined in 40 CFR Part 312.10. Our staff members have conducted over 1000 ESAs in Ohio, Indiana, and Michigan. Our clients have included private individuals, financial institutions, local and state government agencies, attorneys, real estate firms, etc.

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Environmental Fun Facts

Australia’s Great Barrier Reef is roughly the size of Italy.

Crocodiles sometimes climb trees (Florida has both Crocodiles and Alligators)

The Pacific Ocean has more water than all other seas and oceans combined.

Light travels 900,000 times faster than sound.

A freshwater lake the size of Lake Ontario is hidden under nearly 2.5 miles of ice in Antarctica

The Amazon rain forest is about twice the size of India.

Jellyfish can sting you even when they are dead.

If the dormant super volcano in Yellowstone National Park ever erupted, it would likely spew enough ash to cover all of North America.

All of the earth’s land could fit in the Pacific Ocean

Hummingbirds visit more than 1,000 flowers every day to keep themselves fed.

Spring moves 100 feet per day northward and 10 feet per day up a mountain.

One acre of soil can have more than a million worms living in it.

Beach sand has a melting point of 3000 F

Osprey birds build nests big enough to fit an adult human inside

Louisiana is home to over 500,000 wild pigs.

Each year winds blow about 40 million tons of dust from Africa’s Sahara to the Amazon River basin.

More than 100 miles of mining tunnels exist under Detroit, Michigan.

Hummingbirds flap their wings up to 80 times a second.

The longest living organisms on Earth are trees

Tortoises can crawl about one mile an hour.

Over 20% of all fresh water on the planet is in a lake in Siberia, Lake Baikal